Difference between revisions of "A Portrait of Esav/1"

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<page type="Introduction">
 
<page type="Introduction">
 
<h1>A Portrait of Esav</h1>
 
<h1>A Portrait of Esav</h1>
<div><b><center>THIS TOPIC HAS NOT YET UNDERGONE EDITORIAL REVIEW</center></b></div>
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<h2 name="">Esav the Enigma</h2>
 
<h2 name="">Esav the Enigma</h2>
<p>Frequently, the Torah simply recounts events which happened without pronouncing explicit moral judgment on the characters involved. &#160;In cases where the circumstances are hazy and details are scant, the reader must then struggle to piece together assorted (and sometimes contradictory) clues in order to reveal the lessons and meanings of the characters and their stories.</p>
+
<p>Frequently, the Torah simply recounts events without pronouncing explicit moral judgment on the characters involved. &#160;In cases where the circumstances are hazy and details are scant, the reader must then struggle to piece together assorted (and sometimes contradictory) clues in order to reveal the lessons and meanings of the characters and their stories.</p>
<p>Esav is a case in point.&#160; The Torah tells us very little about his deeds and makes no definitive character evaluation.&#160; A cursory survey of the data seems to show that much of the evidence the Torah does provide is at best equivocal:</p>
+
<p>Esav is a case in point.&#160; The Torah tells us very little about his deeds and makes no definitive character evaluation.&#160; A cursory survey of the data seems to show that much of the evidence the Torah does provide is, at most, equivocal:</p>
<p>&#160;</p>
 
<p>&#160;</p>
 
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><a href="Bereshit25-19" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25:27</a> states that Esav was a hunter ("אִישׁ יֹדֵעַ צַיִד").&#160; Is there an implied critique of Esav's choice of profession?<fn>While various commentators understand this description to connote a trapping and deceitful mind, there is little basis for this in a literal reading of the verse.</fn>&#160; It is hard to know.</li>
+
<li><a href="Bereshit25-19" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25:27</a> states that Esav was a hunter ("אִישׁ יֹדֵעַ צַיִד").&#160; Is this an implied critique of Esav's choice of profession,<fn>While various commentators understand this description to connote a trapping and deceitful mind, there is little basis for this in a literal reading of the verse.</fn> or might it even be praise for his talents?</li>
 
<li>In <a href="Bereshit25-19" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25:34</a>, we read how Yaakov persuaded Esav to sell his birthright and how Esav then disdained it.&#160; Was there a moral failing in this episode?&#160; If yes, was it on the part of Esav or Yaakov?<fn>For elaboration, see <a href="Sale of the Birthright – A Fair Deal" data-aht="page">Sale of the Birthright</a>.</fn></li>
 
<li>In <a href="Bereshit25-19" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25:34</a>, we read how Yaakov persuaded Esav to sell his birthright and how Esav then disdained it.&#160; Was there a moral failing in this episode?&#160; If yes, was it on the part of Esav or Yaakov?<fn>For elaboration, see <a href="Sale of the Birthright – A Fair Deal" data-aht="page">Sale of the Birthright</a>.</fn></li>
 
<li><a href="Bereshit26-34" data-aht="source">Bereshit 26:34-35</a> notes that Esav married two Hittite women who caused grief to both of his parents.<fn>Both Yitzchak and Yaakov are careful not to marry a Canaanite woman.&#160; However, it is unclear that Esav's nuptials were a violation of any prohibition.&#160; For further discussion, see&#160;<a href="Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak" data-aht="page">Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak</a> and <a href="Avraham's Many Wives" data-aht="page">Avraham's Many Wives</a>.</fn>&#160; Yet, <a href="Bereshit28-8" data-aht="source">Bereshit 28:8-9</a> also records that when Esav realized this, he tried to rectify the situation by marrying a daughter of Yishmael.<fn>Although Esav does not rid himself of his original wives, he seems to be making an attempt to correct his mistake, or at least to improve for the future.</fn></li>
 
<li><a href="Bereshit26-34" data-aht="source">Bereshit 26:34-35</a> notes that Esav married two Hittite women who caused grief to both of his parents.<fn>Both Yitzchak and Yaakov are careful not to marry a Canaanite woman.&#160; However, it is unclear that Esav's nuptials were a violation of any prohibition.&#160; For further discussion, see&#160;<a href="Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak" data-aht="page">Wanted: A Wife for Yitzchak</a> and <a href="Avraham's Many Wives" data-aht="page">Avraham's Many Wives</a>.</fn>&#160; Yet, <a href="Bereshit28-8" data-aht="source">Bereshit 28:8-9</a> also records that when Esav realized this, he tried to rectify the situation by marrying a daughter of Yishmael.<fn>Although Esav does not rid himself of his original wives, he seems to be making an attempt to correct his mistake, or at least to improve for the future.</fn></li>
<li>In <a href="Bereshit27-1" data-aht="source">Bereshit 27:41</a>, the Torah tells us that, in his anger over the stealing of his blessing, Esav contemplated killing Yaakov.&#160; Had Esav attempted to execute this plan, it would have been a horrible act, but it is unclear that he ever did so.<fn>Jubilees and various Midrashim describe how Esav himself or his sons later attempt to kill Yaakov, but the Torah gives no indication that this ever happened.</fn>&#160; And can one blame him for being furious at not only being swindled, but having his father add insult to injury by then giving a second blessing to Yaakov?</li>
+
<li>In <a href="Bereshit27-1" data-aht="source">Bereshit 27:41</a>, the Torah tells us that, in his anger over the stealing of his blessing, Esav contemplated killing Yaakov.&#160; Had Esav attempted to execute this plan, it would undoubtedly have been a heinous act, but it is far from clear that he ever tried.<fn>Jubilees and various Midrashim describe how Esav himself or his sons later attempt to kill Yaakov, but the Torah gives no indication that this ever happened.</fn>&#160; And can one blame him for being furious not only at being swindled, but also at having his father add insult to injury by giving a second blessing to Yaakov?</li>
<li>When decades later, Yaakov returns to Canaan in <a href="Bereshit32-4" data-aht="source">Bereshit 32-33</a>, Esav comes to greet him accompanied by a group of 400 men.&#160; It is possible that Esav was bringing an army in order to attack Yaakov, but if so, why does he instead embrace and kiss him?</li>
+
<li>When decades later, Yaakov returns to Canaan in <a href="Bereshit32-4" data-aht="source">Bereshit 32-33</a>, Esav comes to greet him accompanied by a group of 400 men.&#160; One possible reading is that Esav was bringing an army in order to attack Yaakov.&#160; But if so, why would he instead embrace and kiss him?</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
<p>&#160;</p>
+
To sum up, while the Torah may present Esav as a somewhat coarse character, it is much more questionable whether it views Esav as a wicked or even negative person.&#160; And while Hashem makes plain His own endorsement of the choice of Yaakov to be the next patriarch (and this surely is a factor which motivates some exegetes to find faults in Esav),<fn>This is explicit in the Beit El revelation in Bereshit 28.</fn> it is not so obvious why Esav was rejected.<fn>This is not such an anomaly in the Torah.&#160; When Hashem favors Hevel's offering over Kayin's and when Yitzchak is selected instead of Yishmael, the Torah does not explicitly say that this was due to the righteous conduct of the chosen or reprehensible behavior of the rejected.</fn>
  
 
<h2 name="">Parents Playing Favorites</h2>
 
<h2 name="">Parents Playing Favorites</h2>
<p>From the outset, Yitzchak and Rivka each favored one of their children.</p>
+
<p>Sefer Bereshit is replete, from beginning to end, with sibling rivalry and parental favoritism. Yet, the story of Yaakov and Esav and their relationships with their parents stands out, as it is a case where despite the brothers sharing the same father and a mother, each parent favors a different child.&#160; These preferences are proclaimed already at the very outset of the narrative in <a href="Bereshit25-19" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25</a>:</p>
 
<multilang style="overflow: auto;">
 
<multilang style="overflow: auto;">
<q xml:lang="he" dir="rtl">וַיֶּאֱהַב יִצְחָק אֶת עֵשָׂו כִּי צַיִד בְּפִיו וְרִבְקָה אֹהֶבֶת אֶת יַעֲקֹב. (בראשית כ"ה:כ"ח)</q>
+
<q xml:lang="he" dir="rtl">(כח)&#160; וַיֶּאֱהַב יִצְחָק אֶת עֵשָׂו כִּי צַיִד בְּפִיו וְרִבְקָה אֹהֶבֶת אֶת יַעֲקֹב.</q>
<q xml:lang="en">And Yitzchak loved Esav, because he ate of his hunting, and Rivka loved Yaakov. (Bereshit 25:28)</q>
+
<q xml:lang="en">(28)&#160; And Yitzchak loved Esav, because he ate of his hunting, and Rivka loved Yaakov.</q>
 
</multilang>
 
</multilang>
<p>These preferences came to the fore again, in the story of the blessings. While Yitzchak wanted to bless Esav, Rivka ensured that Yaakov was blessed. What led each parent to prefer a different son? What is the meaning of "כִּי צַיִד בְּפִיו"?&#160; Were the predilections due to their sons' innate character traits or actions, or due to more superficial differences such as age order or their chosen professions?</p>
+
<p>These predilections come to the fore again, in the story of the blessings. While Yitzchak planned to bless Esav, Rivka ensured through deceitful measures that Yaakov was blessed.</p>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>What is the meaning of "כִּי צַיִד בְּפִיו"?&#160; Was Yitzchak's most important consideration purely gastronomical?&#160;</li>
 +
<li>What led each parent to favor a different son?&#160; Was Yitzchak wholly unaware of or apathetic to Rivka's considerations?<fn>Additionally, if Esav truly was completely wicked, how could it be that Yitzchak and Rivka raised such a child while failing to exert any positive influence on him.&#160; Could Yitzchak really have been totally blind to Esav's behavior?&#160; Does not <a href="Bereshit26-34" data-aht="source">Bereshit 26:34-35</a> make plain that Yitzchak, too was displeased with Esav's way of life?</fn></li>
 +
<li>Why does Hashem ratify Yaakov's blessings if they were obtained through chicanery?&#160; Could it be that this was only a <i>de facto</i> recognition?&#160; Given Hashem's confirmation, how are we to understand Yitzchak's original plan to bestow them upon Esav?</li>
 +
</ul>
  
<h2 name="">Hashem's Choice</h2>
+
<h2 name="Hashem's Choice">Hashem's Choice and Historical Esav</h2>
<p><a href="Malakhi1-1" data-aht="source">Malakhi</a> begins his prophecies with a statement about Hashem's relationship to both Yaakov and Esav.</p>
+
<p>While Hashem does select Yaakov to be the father of the chosen nation, the Torah never discloses His opinion of Esav.&#160; The prophecy of <a href="Malakhi1-1" data-aht="source">Malakhi</a>, though, is much more blunt, opening with the following statement:</p>
 
<multilang style="overflow: auto;">
 
<multilang style="overflow: auto;">
<q xml:lang="he" dir="rtl">(ב) אָהַבְתִּי אֶתְכֶם אָמַר ה' וַאֲמַרְתֶּם בַּמָּה אֲהַבְתָּנוּ הֲלוֹא אָח עֵשָׂו לְיַעֲקֹב נְאֻם ה' וָאֹהַב אֶת יַעֲקֹב. (ג) וְאֶת עֵשָׂו שָׂנֵאתִי וָאָשִׂים אֶת הָרָיו שְׁמָמָה וְאֶת נַחֲלָתוֹ לְתַנּוֹת מִדְבָּר. (מלאכי א':ב'-ג')</q>
+
<q xml:lang="he" dir="rtl">(ב) אָהַבְתִּי אֶתְכֶם אָמַר ה' וַאֲמַרְתֶּם בַּמָּה אֲהַבְתָּנוּ הֲלוֹא אָח עֵשָׂו לְיַעֲקֹב נְאֻם ה' וָאֹהַב אֶת יַעֲקֹב.&#160; (ג) וְאֶת עֵשָׂו שָׂנֵאתִי וָאָשִׂים אֶת הָרָיו שְׁמָמָה וְאֶת נַחֲלָתוֹ לְתַנּוֹת מִדְבָּר.</q>
<q xml:lang="en">(2) You have been loved by me, said Hashem. But you say, Where was your love for us? Was not Esav Yaakov's brother? Said Hashem: and Yaakov was loved by me. (3) But Esav I hated, and I made his mountains a desolation, and I gave his inheritance to the jackals of the wilderness. (Malakhi 1:2-3)</q>
+
<q xml:lang="en">(2) You have been loved by me, said Hashem. But you say, Where was your love for us? Was not Esav Yaakov's brother? Said Hashem: and Yaakov was loved by me. (3) But Esav I hated, and I made his mountains a desolation, and I gave his inheritance to the jackals of the wilderness.</q>
 
</multilang>
 
</multilang>
<p>According to Malakhi, Hashem loves Yaakov but hates Esav. Malakhi, though, does not explain Hashem's preference. Was this a random choice, or was it caused by Yaakov's or Esav's actions?</p>
+
<p>According to Malakhi, Hashem loves Yaakov but hates Esav.&#160; However, Malakhi does not explain what caused this preference.&#160; Additionally, is this prophecy speaking of Esav the individual, or is it merely using his name as a symbol for the nation of Edom with whom there was historical strife and enmity?</p>
<p>While Tanakh might be explicit regarding the judgment of Esav by both Hashem and his parents, it is very obscure as to the basis for such judgments. The explicit choice of Yaakov over Esav, without any clear textual evidence as to Esav's negative qualities or explicit mention of egregious sins, leaves the reader to wonder why was Esav rejected? What were his faults? How should we evaluate his character?</p>
+
<p>Significantly, Esav as a symbol lived on long after his genetic descendants had blended into the pool of nations.&#160; From the Idumeans during the Hasmonean period, through the Romans, and continuing to Christianity, Esav remained as the archetype of Israel's sworn enemy.&#160; Undoubtedly, these associations influenced many of the&#160;<a href="2" data-aht="subpage">approaches</a> of the commentators throughout the generations.</p>
 
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Latest revision as of 11:15, 9 December 2014

A Portrait of Esav

Introduction

Esav the Enigma

Frequently, the Torah simply recounts events without pronouncing explicit moral judgment on the characters involved.  In cases where the circumstances are hazy and details are scant, the reader must then struggle to piece together assorted (and sometimes contradictory) clues in order to reveal the lessons and meanings of the characters and their stories.

Esav is a case in point.  The Torah tells us very little about his deeds and makes no definitive character evaluation.  A cursory survey of the data seems to show that much of the evidence the Torah does provide is, at most, equivocal:

  • Bereshit 25:27 states that Esav was a hunter ("אִישׁ יֹדֵעַ צַיִד").  Is this an implied critique of Esav's choice of profession,1 or might it even be praise for his talents?
  • In Bereshit 25:34, we read how Yaakov persuaded Esav to sell his birthright and how Esav then disdained it.  Was there a moral failing in this episode?  If yes, was it on the part of Esav or Yaakov?2
  • Bereshit 26:34-35 notes that Esav married two Hittite women who caused grief to both of his parents.3  Yet, Bereshit 28:8-9 also records that when Esav realized this, he tried to rectify the situation by marrying a daughter of Yishmael.4
  • In Bereshit 27:41, the Torah tells us that, in his anger over the stealing of his blessing, Esav contemplated killing Yaakov.  Had Esav attempted to execute this plan, it would undoubtedly have been a heinous act, but it is far from clear that he ever tried.5  And can one blame him for being furious not only at being swindled, but also at having his father add insult to injury by giving a second blessing to Yaakov?
  • When decades later, Yaakov returns to Canaan in Bereshit 32-33, Esav comes to greet him accompanied by a group of 400 men.  One possible reading is that Esav was bringing an army in order to attack Yaakov.  But if so, why would he instead embrace and kiss him?

To sum up, while the Torah may present Esav as a somewhat coarse character, it is much more questionable whether it views Esav as a wicked or even negative person.  And while Hashem makes plain His own endorsement of the choice of Yaakov to be the next patriarch (and this surely is a factor which motivates some exegetes to find faults in Esav),6 it is not so obvious why Esav was rejected.7

Parents Playing Favorites

Sefer Bereshit is replete, from beginning to end, with sibling rivalry and parental favoritism. Yet, the story of Yaakov and Esav and their relationships with their parents stands out, as it is a case where despite the brothers sharing the same father and a mother, each parent favors a different child.  These preferences are proclaimed already at the very outset of the narrative in Bereshit 25:

EN/HEע/E

(כח)  וַיֶּאֱהַב יִצְחָק אֶת עֵשָׂו כִּי צַיִד בְּפִיו וְרִבְקָה אֹהֶבֶת אֶת יַעֲקֹב.

(28)  And Yitzchak loved Esav, because he ate of his hunting, and Rivka loved Yaakov.

These predilections come to the fore again, in the story of the blessings. While Yitzchak planned to bless Esav, Rivka ensured through deceitful measures that Yaakov was blessed.

  • What is the meaning of "כִּי צַיִד בְּפִיו"?  Was Yitzchak's most important consideration purely gastronomical? 
  • What led each parent to favor a different son?  Was Yitzchak wholly unaware of or apathetic to Rivka's considerations?8
  • Why does Hashem ratify Yaakov's blessings if they were obtained through chicanery?  Could it be that this was only a de facto recognition?  Given Hashem's confirmation, how are we to understand Yitzchak's original plan to bestow them upon Esav?

Hashem's Choice and Historical Esav

While Hashem does select Yaakov to be the father of the chosen nation, the Torah never discloses His opinion of Esav.  The prophecy of Malakhi, though, is much more blunt, opening with the following statement:

EN/HEע/E

(ב) אָהַבְתִּי אֶתְכֶם אָמַר ה' וַאֲמַרְתֶּם בַּמָּה אֲהַבְתָּנוּ הֲלוֹא אָח עֵשָׂו לְיַעֲקֹב נְאֻם ה' וָאֹהַב אֶת יַעֲקֹב.  (ג) וְאֶת עֵשָׂו שָׂנֵאתִי וָאָשִׂים אֶת הָרָיו שְׁמָמָה וְאֶת נַחֲלָתוֹ לְתַנּוֹת מִדְבָּר.

(2) You have been loved by me, said Hashem. But you say, Where was your love for us? Was not Esav Yaakov's brother? Said Hashem: and Yaakov was loved by me. (3) But Esav I hated, and I made his mountains a desolation, and I gave his inheritance to the jackals of the wilderness.

According to Malakhi, Hashem loves Yaakov but hates Esav.  However, Malakhi does not explain what caused this preference.  Additionally, is this prophecy speaking of Esav the individual, or is it merely using his name as a symbol for the nation of Edom with whom there was historical strife and enmity?

Significantly, Esav as a symbol lived on long after his genetic descendants had blended into the pool of nations.  From the Idumeans during the Hasmonean period, through the Romans, and continuing to Christianity, Esav remained as the archetype of Israel's sworn enemy.  Undoubtedly, these associations influenced many of the approaches of the commentators throughout the generations.